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    Odds Czar: Simple Biases in the Futures Markets 2006

    Art's futures biases for April 21. A "1" means bullish bias. A "-1" means bearish bias. The total is the sum of biases. A positive sum will be long bias. A negative sum will be a short bias. A sum of zero will be a neutral bias.
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    Odds Czar: Simple Biases in the Futures Markets 2006

    The either-or indicators are not offering much in most of the markets I track. Sometimes you can find workable clues elsewhere, however. In a macro-sense, the index markets are quickly becoming overbought. We are in the day-of-month timeframe that generally sees selling pressure. The month...
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    Odds Czar: Simple Biases in the Futures Markets 2006

    Art's futures biases for April 20. A "1" means bullish bias. A "-1" means bearish bias. The total is the sum of biases. A positive sum will be long bias. A negative sum will be a short bias. A sum of zero will be a neutral bias.
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    Odds Czar: Simple Biases in the Futures Markets 2006

    Art's futures biases for April 19. A "1" means bullish bias. A "-1" means bearish bias. The total is the sum of biases. A positive sum will be long bias. A negative sum will be a short bias. A sum of zero will be a neutral bias.
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    Odds Czar: Simple Biases in the Futures Markets 2006

    Art's futures biases for April 18. A "1" means bullish bias. A "-1" means bearish bias. The total is the sum of biases. A positive sum will be long bias. A negative sum will be a short bias. A sum of zero will be a neutral bias.
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    Odds Czar: Simple Biases in the Futures Markets 2006

    Art's futures biases for April 16. A "1" means bullish bias. A "-1" means bearish bias. The total is the sum of biases. A positive sum will be long bias. A negative sum will be a short bias. A sum of zero will be a neutral bias.
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    Odds Czar: Simple Biases in the Futures Markets 2006

    Art's futures biases for April 13.
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    Odds Czar: Simple Biases in the Futures Markets 2006

    Art's futures biases for April 12. A "1" means bullish bias. A "-1" means bearish bias. The total is the sum of biases. A positive sum will be long bias. A negative sum will be a short bias. A sum of zero will be a neutral bias.
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    Odds Czar: Simple Biases in the Futures Markets 2006

    sashe wrote Looks like strong sell on NQ and ER2 tomorrow -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- based on the biases posted above for April 4th, Nasd = +7 bias count and Russell2K = +6 bias count. Don't they mean that they are biased towards...
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    Odds Czar: Simple Biases in the Futures Markets 2006

    dbl arrow wrote Could you not, for the sake of continuity, edit out something like this? If this is an end of month deal could you not prepare for and fix this when it occurs? Thanks, Chris making a day disappear and averaging the remaining days would also skew your results. probably...
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    Odds Czar: Simple Biases in the Futures Markets 2006

    The best play for Monday is to sell the currencies, particularly the yen and the Swiss franc, which both posted negative numbers in the signal categories. All the currencies have formed “cap” tops, although the yen isn't posting one because it is occurring following a down rather than up...
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    Odds Czar: Simple Biases in the Futures Markets 2006

    prevail wrote art, your research is truly impressive. how successfully does it translate to trading? are you primarily looking for the best entry/exit? ________________________ the answer to your second question is i'm looking for the best something/anything that gives me an edge. entry...
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    Odds Czar: Simple Biases in the Futures Markets 2006

    jack sparrow wrote "Tuesday: Go opposite Tuesday’s close-to-close net change." I'm just a humble pirate, Art. Mebrains can't figure this one out..can you explain? ____________________________________________ arrghgh matey. that be a typo for sure. should read-- "tuesday, go...
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    Odds Czar: Simple Biases in the Futures Markets 2006

    There is a tendency for Mondays to continue the action from Fridays in the indexes. This is on a close-to-close basis, and all three indexes finished higher. Ironically, both the S&Ps and Russell, though higher on the day, were actually lower than the open. Still a rule is a rule, and...
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    Odds Czar: Simple Biases in the Futures Markets 2006

    marray wrote Art; Thought that was a nickname, at first , see its actually your name. Helpful book ,When SuperTraders Meet K-nite, by Art Collins. Including but nor limited to; Buy a creeper, sell a leaper murray ___________________________ cha CHING thanks for the sale uncle...
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    Odds Czar: Simple Biases in the Futures Markets 2006

    jack wrote Art: Do your "Calendar" biases take Options Expiration and Futures Expiration days into account other than being covered in a general way over time? From your introductory posts it does not seem to be the case. Jack You are correct, they do not. those particular stats are...
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    Odds Czar: Simple Biases in the Futures Markets 2006

    For Friday, I will be looking to sell both the S&Ps and Russell. The yen is the only other market with a pronounced signal, also a sell.
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    Odds Czar: Simple Biases in the Futures Markets 2006

    For Thursday, I'll stand aside in the indexes due to conflicting signals. The other markets are signaling almost identical to the day before, shorts in both the currency and bond complexes. The best downside bets would be in the yen, the 30-year bonds and 10-year notes.
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    Odds Czar: Simple Biases in the Futures Markets 2006

    For Wednesday, I won't look at anything other than the red (sell) side of the trading cards. The S&P's have downside confirmation across all three signal categories. None of the indexes are posting any positive number. The situation is similar in the currencies, where you see a large negative...
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    Odds Czar: Simple Biases in the Futures Markets 2006

    The indexes continue to give conflicting signals. I would tend to be more favorable to down than upside action, but that is based on nothing more than an idea that the markets are becoming overbought. Better plays would be to go short any of the bonds, (-2 across the board in the either-or)...
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